I think they filmed the first part at the Busch farm/Clydesdale farm just outside of St. Louis. I've been there and it is great--the baby clydesdales are really cute; long, gangly legs with those big 'ol feet.

A new study finds that people who are chipper & happy live longer. Which is surprising because people who aren't chipper & happy want to kill people who are always chipper & happy. David Letterman

^Agreed. I live in Merrimack, NH - where we have a Budweiser plant and where they stable one of the Clydesdale hitches. I think the other hitch is in St. Louis, MO. But anyway - the brewery and the ground are free to tour and walk around and you can go to the stables and see the horses. I remember a couple of summers ago they had two baby Clydesdales and they were SO damn adorable. And let me say, unsurprisingly, those horses are treated like kings. They are unbelievably beautiful and are just so amazing to see in person. Last summer, they even had the Budweiser dalmatian roaming around the stables. Super sweet dog. Would wander up to you and just let you scratch him under the ears and chin. He was exhausted after coming in from the fields with the horses. :)

The downside was that hearing Stevie just reinforced how mediocre Beyonce is.

Yeah. What ever happened to subtlety? Seems every superstar singer nowadays thinks she has to put every last bit of emotion into every last song. It could be Frosty the Snowman, and they'd find some way to turn it into a heart-wrenching drama.

Yeah. What ever happened to subtlety? Seems every superstar singer nowadays thinks she has to put every last bit of emotion into every last song. It could be Frosty the Snowman, and they'd find some way to turn it into a heart-wrenching drama.

I don't know, but it's certainly tiresome. Not to mention the melisma, aka "urban yodeling." I'd be impressed if more young female singers actually held a note. That's actually something Adele does a little better than her peers, although I'm kind of tired of her. She's pretty dramatic, too.

Between Stevie Nicks and the Rolling Stones (and, hell, the Partridge Family), the music in the commercials put the Halftime show to shame!

I didn't watch the commercial whenever it aired during the Super Bowl, but got a chance to see it yesterday. It's very touching It reminded me of the story of the lion who was released into the wild after being raised by 2 guys, then reunited with him a year or so later. Much to the surprise of 'experts,' the lion remembered them and was just as happy to see them as they were to see him.

You cannot post new topics in this forumYou cannot reply to topics in this forumYou cannot delete your posts in this forumYou cannot edit your posts in this forumYou cannot create polls in this forumYou cannot vote in polls in this forum